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Our faith in figure skating

Renewing love for the dramatic, graceful winter sport can be intoxicating

Source: CBC Sports
Date: October 31, 2007
Author: Scott Russell
Just the other day I told a friend of mine that I was excited to begin my new assignment as play-by-play voice for the upcoming figure skating season on CBC. "Figure skating!" he huffed. "That's a dead end street. No one believes in figure skating any more."

As he went on to babble about the Toronto Maple Leafs and his conviction that this would "absolutely" be the year they would end their Stanley Cup drought, I found my thoughts wandering back to skating.

Maybe he was right - maybe figure skating isn't what it once was. It seems that corruption in judging, lack lustre champions and general apathy have conspired to push something that was always considered magical, out of our consciousness and subsequently, right out of a prime time TV slot.

Then again, maybe we, the spectators, are looking for the wrong things in figure skating. Perhaps we're trying to turn one of the last great spectacles in all of sport into something far too ordinary.

It strikes me the fantastic appeal of figure skating lies LESS in the marks or results and MORE in the impressions it can create. Let's face it, this sport is about glamour, intrigue and the struggle to survive in the face of your detractors, and frankly, what's wrong with that? "This is about a very personal drama," Olympic medallist and CBC figure skating analyst, Tracy Wilson says. "Those skaters are all alone on the ice. They either make it or they don't. There is nowhere to hide."

Memories of the "Battle of the Brians"

That's the kind of suspense that made me watch figure skating in the first place. I recollect being riveted by the "Battle of the Brians," Boitano and Orser, at the 1988 Calgary Olympics. It made little difference to me who won the gold medal. It was a barn-burner in front of a packed house and it was suspenseful beyond belief.

The same was true of watching Kurt Browning in his prime. He did the unthinkable and attempted the "quad" at those same Olympics and landed it at the world championships in Budapest later that year. The four-time world champion never captured an Olympic medal but went onto become one of the most revered characters in the sport. It's because he took a million risks in order to heighten his performance and excite the crowd.

"I'm not too happy with our sport right now," Browning sighs. He'll be working with us in the play-by-play booth this season and defiantly beats the drum for a return to the foundation of figure skating success. "We've got to turn things around and celebrate talent," he continues. " There is a bigger group of great skaters on the planet than ever before. But this is about more than going from jump to jump. This should be about having something to say on the ice."

Indeed, the fallout from the 2002 Olympics when Jamie Sale and David Pelletier were almost robbed of a gold medal due to criminal judging based on political alliances, has resulted in a more clearly defined set of standards in the new scoring system. That said, the skaters of today are more restricted and it has a tendency to show in their routines. They sometimes appear to be jumping through hoops and ticking off tricks in order to build marks at the end of the day.

Where is the magic?

"With all the rules and points and categories of marking, there is no box for magic," says choreographer, NBC analyst, and former Canadian Olympian Sandra Bezic. "That individuality is what drew in the audience. The human element is what was most alluring, the ability to develop a unique artistic voice."

When considering the figure skating season to come, it makes sense to celebrate the differences that the sport uncovers - the rare jewels revealing themselves along the way. Moments such as a 14-year-old by the name of Caroline Zhang, spinning effortlessly at centre ice at Skate America in front of a silent throng. She executed something called "The Pearl" and I wondered how she could possibly do it. Zhang didn't score highest when all the points were tallied, but she made an indelible impression on the audience in attendance and those watching on TV. It was a truly wonderful moment in sport - breathtaking.

We try so hard to quantify the athletic endeavour these days, enforce our limits upon it. There must be winners and losers and everything has to be fair - you'll get no argument from me. Still, in all of our due diligence, let's not destroy what we love most about figure skating. At its best, it is an awesome display of talent and skill where judges will be villains and the vanquished can claim hero status.

Simply put, this icebound sport, which we have found so intoxicating in the past, can move us to great emotion again, if only we will let it. Our faith in figure skating means letting go long enough to enjoy the show.